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Former Chiefs WR Publicly Accepts Pay Cut to Return Amid Banged-Up WR Room

KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 24, 2025

Mecole Hardman broke his silence in a brief sideline interview after a private workout in Arizona, saying he is willing to cut his salary to rejoin the Chiefs as injuries thin Kansas City’s receiving corps.

“Kansas City has always been my home; I’ll show up whenever they need me. If taking a pay cut is what it takes to come back and wear the Red and Gold again, let’s do it. I hope I can help the Chiefs while the WR room is hurting,” Hardman said.


Pressed on “why the Chiefs and why now,” Hardman pointed to familiarity and immediacy: he knows Andy Reid’s playbook, the cadence and checks at the line with Patrick Mahomes, and the spacing rules in Kansas City’s motion-heavy quick game and play-action concepts. He added that his perimeter blocking and willingness to work the dirty areas can steady the run game while the offense rides out the injury wave.
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Asked about money, Hardman declined specifics but indicated he would entertain a short, team-friendly structure heavy on performance bonuses—snap counts, receptions, yards, and touchdowns—so the club preserves cap flexibility while he earns his way back into a bigger role.

On role and usage, Hardman framed himself as a “trust player” who can line up outside or in the slot, win leverage on third down, stretch safeties vertically, and serve as a reliable red-zone piece on designed touches. His speed and willingness to block, he said, are “day-one” contributions that don’t require a long ramp-up.

Beyond the X’s and O’s, Hardman noted the locker-room value of a familiar voice during an injury crunch: reinforcing details in meetings, tempo on the practice field, and standards for the younger receivers. “It’s about doing the little things right when the room is stretched thin,” he said.

If talks advance, routine steps would follow: medicals, role alignment with the coaching staff, and incentive triggers tied to usage and production. Should both sides find common ground, Hardman could be a plug-and-play veteran presence as Kansas City navigates a banged-up stretch at wide receiver.

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Eagles Head Coach Announces A.J. Brown To Start On The Bench For Standout Rookie After Poor Performance vs. Broncos
  Philadelphia, PA — the Philadelphia Eagles’ head coach confirmed that A.J. Brown will start on the bench in Week 6 against the New York Giants, with the boundary starting spot going to rookie WR Taylor Morin—an undrafted signing out of Wake Forest who flashed through rookie camp and the preseason. The decision follows an underwhelming offensive showing against the Denver Broncos, where several snaps highlighted the unit being out of sync between Brown and Jalen Hurts. On a midfield option route, Hurts read Cover-2 and waited for an inside break into the soft spot, while Brown maintained a vertical stem and widened to the boundary to stretch the corner. The ball fell into empty space and the drive stalled. On a separate red-zone snap, a pre-snap hot-route signal wasn’t locked identically by the pair, resulting in a hurried throw that was broken up. The staff treated it as a reminder about route-depth precision, timing, and pre-snap communication—the micro-details that underpin the Eagles’ offense when January football arrives. Starting Morin is part of a plan to re-establish rhythm: the early script is expected to emphasize horizontal spacing, short choice/option concepts, and over routes off play-action to probe the Giants’ responses. Morin—who has shown strong hands in tight windows and clean timing in the preseason—should give the call sheet a steadier platform, while Brown will be “activated” in high-leverage downs such as 3rd-and-medium, two-minute, and red zone to maximize his body control, early separation, and the coverage gravity that can force New York to roll coverage. Facing the tough call, Brown kept his response brief but competitive:“I can’t accept letting a kid take my spot, but I respect his decision. Let’s see what we’re saying after the game. I’ll practice and wait for my chance. When the ball is in the air, everyone will know who I am.” Operationally, the staff is expected to streamline the call sheet between Hurts and Brown: standardize option-route depths, clearly flag hot signals, and increase game-speed reps in 7-on-7 and team periods so both are “seeing it the same and triggering the same.” Handing the start to Morin also resets the locker-room standard: every role is earned by tape and daily detail—even for a star of Brown’s caliber. If Brown converts the message into cleaner stems and precise landmarks—catching the ball at the spot and on time—the Eagles anticipate early returns: fewer dead drives, better red-zone execution when back-shoulder throws and choice routes are run “in the same language,” and an offense that regains tempo before taking on Big Blue. With Taylor Morin in the opening script, Philadelphia hopes the fresh piece is enough to jump-start the attack from the first series.